Las Vegas Review-Journal

Who’s laughing now? Jimmy Fallon’s rivals

- By John Koblin New York Times News Service

Ten months after Inaugurati­on Day, the trend is holding: For late-night hosts, being sharply critical of President Donald Trump is a winning strategy. And that is bad news for “The Tonight Show.”

Stephen Colbert, who has made Trump a nightly target, assumed the top position in the ratings race in February and has only increased his lead since then. His program, “The Late Show” on CBS, has taken viewers away from Jimmy Fallon, the cheerful host of NBC’S storied franchise, who has lost 21 percent of his audience year over year since the fall season began on Sept. 25. At the same time, Jimmy Kimmel has made ratings gains in the 11:35 p.m. slot on ABC.

Ever since Colbert leapfrogge­d Fallon in total viewers, NBC executives have emphasized that “The Tonight Show” is still the No. 1 choice of viewers in the 18-to-49-year-old group prized by advertiser­s.

Now even that lead is shrinking.

In the November sweeps period, which ended last week, Colbert cut into Fallon’s lead among younger viewers, finishing 57,000 behind him, according to Nielsen data. That’s the closest the CBS host has come to Fallon among 18- to 49-year-olds in the 27 months the two have competedhe­adtohead.

A year ago, Colbert trailed Fallon in that demographi­c by roughly 364,000 viewers. In the November 2015 sweeps period — which coincided with Colbert’s shaky start as a network host — Fallon’s lead was nearly 500,000.

The size of Colbert’s entire audience has spiked along with his gains among younger viewers. During the sweeps period, he averaged 3.7 million total viewers a night — a 23 percent increase from a year ago.

Since the fall season began, Fallon’s audience in the 18-to49 group has plunged by 26 percent, even though he is, at 43, the youngest of the late-night network hosts.

Still, Fallon does maintain a lead in that demographi­c, outperform­ing Colbert, 53, by 90,000 a night, on average, for the season. He also averages nearly 200,000 more than Kimmel, the 50-yearold host of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on ABC.

All three late-night network shows have shed viewers in the 18-to-49 demographi­c over the last year, but Fallon’s program has lost significan­tly more than the other two.

The recent declines leave the host of “The Tonight Show” in danger of losing his position as the second-place late-night host. Kimmel’s show has averaged 2.4 million viewers a night, compared with 2.6 million for Fallon.

A year ago, a battle between Fallon and Kimmel was almost unimaginab­le, given the venerable NBC franchise’s lead of 1 million total viewers over ABC’S latenight offering.

During the current season, Kimmel — who, like Colbert, has made himself into a politicall­y engaged monologuis­t — has seen his audience grow by 4 percent. Recently, he enjoyed a wave of publicity and warm reviews after he dissected the legislativ­e attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act. He made the issue personal by letting his audience in on the details of his infant son’s medical procedures for a rare heart defect.

Fallon has mostly stuck with his fun-and-games persona. While Colbert follows his monologues with earnest interviews, Fallon engages guests with gameshow-like segments. During a recent episode, he led actor Denzel Washington and basketball star Stephen Curry in a game of tossing random objects (a butternut squash, a skateboard) into a basketball hoop. On Monday night, Fallon went behind the desk to enthusiast­ically promote the Amazon Echo Show for two minutes.

Fallon does deploy an impression of Trump, but it lacks bite. His inability to capitalize on the political moment has been an outlier for the network, which has had late-night ratings successes thanks to caustic sketches centered on the president on “Saturday Night Live,” as well as Seth Meyers’ lawyerly satirical segments on “Late Night” at 12:35 a.m.

Mindful of Fallon’s sunny nature, NBC executives had hoped that Colbert’s surge in the wild early days of the Trump presidency would die down once the national mood had settled. They envisioned a time when this pair of temperamen­tally different hosts would trade victories week to week. But in the closing days of 2017, audiences have not returned to the network for Fallon’s wide-eyed style.

Indeed, the November numbers show Colbert widening the gap, with a lead over Fallon of 1.1 million viewers.

NBC executives remain hopeful that Fallon can find a way to hold on to the top position among younger viewers. On the upper floors at 30 Rockefelle­r Plaza, younger viewers are considered the coin of the television realm, and the median age for Colbert’s audience is 61, compared with 56 for “The Tonight Show.”

One sign of hope for Fallon: NBC has the rights to “Thursday Night Football” through mid-december (they belonged to CBS earlier in the season), and Fallon’s ratings soared on Thanksgivi­ng, when his show aired after the New York Giants-washington Redskins game.

 ?? CHAD BATKA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Stephen Colbert is shown April 4 during rehearsal of “The Late Show” in New York. The latest ratings show that viewers are tuning out NBC’S fun-and-games approach and f locking to the politicall­y engaged Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel.
CHAD BATKA / THE NEW YORK TIMES Stephen Colbert is shown April 4 during rehearsal of “The Late Show” in New York. The latest ratings show that viewers are tuning out NBC’S fun-and-games approach and f locking to the politicall­y engaged Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel.
 ?? BRYAN DERBALLA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Jimmy Fallon peeks at the audience May 11 before a taping of his “Tonight Show” on NBC, in New York.
BRYAN DERBALLA / THE NEW YORK TIMES Jimmy Fallon peeks at the audience May 11 before a taping of his “Tonight Show” on NBC, in New York.

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